| Literature DB >> 33789720 |
Thomas Welzel1,2, Alina L Bendinger3,4, Christin Glowa1,2,5, Inna Babushkina6, Manfred Jugold6, Peter Peschke1,5, Jürgen Debus2,7, Christian P Karger1,5, Maria Saager1,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Radiation-induced myelopathy is a severe and irreversible complication that occurs after a long symptom-free latency time if the spinal cord was exposed to a significant irradiation dose during tumor treatment. As carbon ions are increasingly investigated for tumor treatment in clinical trials, their effect on normal tissue needs further investigation to assure safety of patient treatments. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-visible morphological alterations could serve as predictive markers for medicinal interventions to avoid severe side effects. Thus, MRI-visible morphological alterations in the rat spinal cord after high dose photon and carbon ion irradiation and their latency times were investigated.Entities:
Keywords: Carbon ion irradiation; Cervical spinal cord; Late radiation effects; Magnetic resonance imaging; Myelopathy
Year: 2021 PMID: 33789720 PMCID: PMC8011205 DOI: 10.1186/s13014-021-01792-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiat Oncol ISSN: 1748-717X Impact factor: 3.481
Fig. 1Time points of MRI of non-irradiated controls (black), and animals irradiated with photons (green) or carbon ions (red), respectively. Animals were first checked monthly for morphological alterations. As soon as an alteration occurred, the respective rat was monitored in shorter time intervals
Mean latency times (± standard deviation) of morphological alterations and neurological distortions after photon and carbon ion irradiation
| Time of onset of morphological and/or neurological alterations [days after irradiation] | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BMC | CA v | CA d | Edema | CA | Syrinx | P I | P II | |
| Photons | 108 ± 47 | 107 ± 29 | ||||||
| 12C-ions | 84 ± 24 | 88 ± 18 | ||||||
Bold printed latency times are significantly different (p < 0.001) between photon and carbon ion irradiated animals
BMC bone marrow conversion, CA v/d contrast agent enhancement in the ventral/dorsal musculature outside the spinal cord, respectively, CA contrast agent enhancement inside the spinal cord, P I (paresis I) at least one forelimb showed signs of neurological dysfunction, P II (paresis II) both forelimbs showed signs of paralysis
a7 out of 8 rats
b3 out of 7 animals showed CA without paresis I
c5 out of 8 animals showed CA without paresis II
Fig. 2Latency times until occurrence of morphological alterations and neurological distortions after irradiation with photons (green) or carbon ions (red). For both irradiation modalities, the morphological alterations outside the spinal cord (BMC, CA v, CA d) occurred significantly earlier than morphological alterations inside the spinal cord (edema, CA, syrinx) and the start of neurological distortions (P I, P II). Box plots (25%/75%) show median (solid line) with 10%/90% percentiles (whiskers). BMC = bone marrow conversion, CA v/d = contrast agent accumulation in the ventral and dorsal musculature outside of the spinal cord, respectively, CA = contrast agent accumulation inside the spinal cord, P I (paresis I) = at least one forelimb showed signs of neurological dysfunction, P II (paresis II) = both forelimbs showed signs of paralysis. *p < 0.05, ***p < 0.001. Note: Statistical comparisons between MRI endpoints outside the spinal cord (BMC, CA v/d) or MRI endpoints inside the spinal (edema, CA, syrinx) cord plus neurological endpoints (P I, P II) were non-significant while any combination between these two groups of endpoints were significant
Fig. 3Exemplary MR-images of irradiation-induced morphological alterations outside the spinal cord compared to respective non-irradiated age-matched controls. Native T1-weighted images of the irradiated rat cervical spinal cord (C1–6) show a hyperintense signal in the vertebral body (yellow arrows) due to bone marrow conversion. T1-weighted images post contrast agent (CA) injection of irradiated animals show CA accumulation in the musculature dorsal and ventral to the spinal cord (blue asterisks) compared to the native T1-weighted. Age-matched control animals of each treatment arm accumulated no CA
Fig. 4Exemplary MR-images of irradiation-induced morphological alterations inside the spinal cord of two animals with paresis II after irradiation with photons or 12C-ions and their age-matched controls. Syrinx (pink arrows) and edema (green arrows) are indicated by hyperintense signals in the T2-weighted images of irradiated animals. T1-weighted images after contrast agent (CA) injection show CA accumulation in the spinal cord (blue asterisks) compared to native T1-weighted images. No CA accumulation was detected in the spinal cord of the age-matched non-irradiated controls
Fig. 5Representative axial histological images of carbon ion and photon irradiated animals with paresis II and their respective age-matched controls. a–d Luxol fast blue staining revealing focal demyelination and necrosis (asterisks) in the S. alba of irradiated animals while control animals showed dense tissue structure (scale bar 200 µm). e–h Endogenous albumin extravasation, represented by brown precipitation, indicates the breakdown of the BSCB. i–l Irradiated segments show a severe decrease in intact blood vessels (CD34, red) and breakdown of the BSCB (EBA, green). Overlap of CD34 and EBA appears yellow. Cell nuclei were counter stained with DAPI (scale bar 50 µm)